Viral Webmaster Program
Now available within Veretekk!
This is HOT! Within Days your little ad will be pulling in orders! And it is FREE to give away!


Originally designed for webmasters exclusively, this little program piggy backs on a Daily Mentor motivational email program. You use this program to send to friends and promote so to build a large verified contact database. Webmasters love it because it delivers a valuable message to an eager audience everyday. The email message that goes out has plenty of room for your small ad. The best part is the email is verified spam free and IT GETS READ!
Within weeks I had my ad going out to 5,000+ everyday without Spam!


Pretty simple really. After I signed up, I gained entry into the awesum Veretekk Marketing vault. Not only was it easy to load my ad, I found out I can use the system to load email lists to send the ad to and....I also got a preconfiguered Daily Motivational signup form to put on my site to help build the list even more. After a couple of weeks my ad was delivering to 5,000 people EVERYDAY! My hits and sales have already gone up!
The best part is how easy and powerful this little program is and it worked!


It works and only took a couple of minutes to completely set it up. It got me two new enrollies in my primary program the first week. They also include a big mailing system I can load my email lists into spam free.
Cool! This is brilliant viral marketing! Way to go Tom!


There are several things I love about this little webmaster secret. It is easy and it works. But that figures because Tom Prendergast built it and since I have known Tom since 1996, he always comes up with the most original things that always work. But simplicity is the key here.
Cool! This is brilliant viral marketing! Way to go Tom!


After about 10 minutes of playing with their very intuitive control panel I was done. I log in everyday and load 1,000 of emails from my database and use the signup form they gave me on several of my pages. In 30 days, I had over 50 direct downloads right from my ad. It works!
Discover the New Veretekk! Marketing Systems at the Speed of Thought.


SIgning up into Veretekk is free. Kick it around, get on the live training, learn how it works. Then upgrade and go to work with the most sophisticated portfolio of tools on the Internet. You can SIGN UP HERE.

 

Motivate Your Friends and Colleagues
Give them "Quotes From the Mentors" It's Free!

>>>>>Sign up here<<<<
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1. Social Search Gaining Steam
Social search directories, basically search engines that allow members to rate and review listings, are getting more and more popular as people move their Internet surfing mobile. Getting restaurant reviews by zip code when you’re out with friends or finding a veterinarian when traveling has become a one button task on the newest generation of phones - of course, then just push another button and get a directions, coupons or place a call. The primary search engines such as Google, Yahoo and MSN are also pulling reviews from listings on social search directories as a way to add content to their local directories. If you’ve either ignored getting listed or just didn’t know about these types of site, now is the time to invest some time and a small amount of money to make sure you get listed, found and reviewed. Here are some of the primary candidates for your social search strategy citysearch insiderpages judysbook merchant circle yelp switchboard superpages yellowpages.com Each of the above directories has either built or is in the process of building applications to reside on the home screen of iPhones and other smart phones. These social business directories are getting into the “location aware” act as well. With new phone coming equipped with GPS capabilities, services are being built that can tell where your phone is and deliver services and information based on that. Yelp just launched their location aware application for iPhone users that pull up business reviews based on your phone’s location. You know, it just might be a good idea to make sure your business is listed and getting some good reviews in the Yelps of the world. This type of business search in only going to get bigger!

2. Types of social marketing
Using the benefits and of doing 'social good' to secure and maintain customer engagement. In 'social marketing' the distinguishing feature is therefore its 'primary' focus on 'social good', and it is not a secondary outcome. Not all public sector and not-for-profit marketing is social marketing. Public sector bodies can use standard marketing approaches to improve the promotion of their relevant services and organizational aims, this can be very important, but should not be confused with 'social marketing' where the focus in on achieving specific behavioural goals with specific audiences in relation to different topics relevant to social good (eg: health, sustainability, recycling, etc). As the dividing lines are rarely clear it is important not to confuse social marketing with commercial marketing. A commercial marketer selling a product may only seek to influence a buyer to make a product purchase. Social marketers, dealing with goals such as reducing cigarette smoking or encouraging condom use, have more difficult goals: to make potentially difficult and long-term behavioral change in target populations. It is sometimes felt that social marketing is restricted to a particular spectrum of client -- the non-profit organization, the health services group, the government agency. These often are the clients of social marketing agencies, but the goal of inducing social change is not restricted to governmental or non-profit charitable organizations; it may be argued that corporate public relations efforts such as funding for the arts are an example of social marketing. Social marketing should not be confused with the Societal Marketing Concept which was a forerunner of sustainable marketing in integrating issues of social responsibility into commercial marketing strategies. In contrast to that, social marketing uses commercial marketing theories, tools and techniques to social issues. Social marketing applies a “customer oriented” approach and uses the concepts and tools used by commercial marketers in pursuit of social goals like Anti-Smoking-Campaigns or fund raising for NGOs More here

3. Four New Ps
Personalization: It is here referred customization of products and services through the use of the Internet. Early examples include Dell on-line and Amazon.com, but this concept is further extended with emerging social media and advanced algorithms. Emerging technologies will continue to push this idea forward. Participation: This is to allow the customer to participate in what the brand should stand for; what should be the product directions and even which ads to run. This concept is laying the foundation for disruptive change through democratization of information. Peer-to-Peer: This refers to customer networks and communities where advocacy happens. The historical problem with marketing is that it is “interruptive” in nature, trying to impose a brand on the customer. This is most apparent in TV advertising. These “passive customer bases” will ultimately be replaced by the “active customer communities”. Brand engagement happens within those conversations. P2P is now being referred as Social Computing and is likely to be the most disruptive force in the future of marketing. Predictive modeling: This refers to algorithms that are being successfully applied in marketing problems (both a regression as well as a classification problem).

4. Brand
A brand is a collection of images and ideas representing an economic producer; more specifically, it refers to the descriptive verbal attributes and concrete symbols such as a name, logo, slogan, and design scheme that convey the essence of a company, product or service. Brand recognition and other reactions are created by the accumulation of experiences with the specific product or service, both directly relating to its use, and through the influence of advertising, design, and media commentary. A brand is a symbolic embodiment of all the information connected to a company, product or service. A brand serves to create associations and expectations among products made by a producer. A brand often includes an explicit logo, fonts, color schemes, symbols and sound which may be developed to represent implicit values, ideas, and even personality. The key objective is to create a relationship of trust. The brand, and "branding" and brand equity have become increasingly important components of culture and the economy, now being described as "cultural accessories and personal philosophies". In non-commercial contexts, the marketing of entities which supply ideas or promises rather than product and services (e.g. political parties or religious organizations) may also be known as "branding". More here

5. Social Marketing
Social marketing is the systematic application of marketing along with other concepts and techniques to achieve specific behavioral goals for a social good. Social marketing can be applied to promote, for example, merit goods, make the society avoid demerit goods and thus to promote that considers society's well being as a whole. This may include asking people not to smoke in public areas, for example, ask them to use seat belts, prompting to make them follow speed limits. Although 'social marketing' is sometimes seen only as using standard commercial marketing practices to achieve non-commercial goals, this is an over-simplification. The primary aim of 'social marketing' is 'social good', while in 'commercial marketing' the aim is primarily 'financial'. This does not mean that commercial marketers can not contribute to achievement of social good. Increasingly, social marketing is being described as having 'two parents' - a 'social parent' = social sciences and social policy, and a 'marketing parent' = commercial and public sector marketing approaches. Beginning in the 1970s, it has in the last decade matured into a much more integrative and inclusive discipline that draws on the full range of social sciences and social policy approaches as well as marketing. More here

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